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Steve Hummer: Scottie Scheffler chill amid all the Masters expectations

Steve Hummer, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution on

Published in Golf

AUGUSTA, Ga. — On a warming earth, Scottie Scheffler only gets cooler. Scottie Scheffler is so cool, the azalea buds shiver when he walks by and postpone their bloom another day. He is cooler than Beyonce’s freezer.

So Scottie — I guess when he turns 40 or so we can start calling him Scott, but that wouldn’t be as cool — shouldn’t be too affected by all the noise he’s attracting at this Masters.

You can make him the shortest-odds favorite to win this tournament in a decade — a borderline ludicrous 4-to-1, the kind of skinny number that hasn’t been posted since Tiger Woods in his prime — and it doesn’t matter. Scheffler is custom made to freeze out such static.

You can heap expectation upon him by the gross ton — listen to ESPN Masters host Scott Van Pelt: “If (Scheffler) putts well, then he’ll win; it’s really that simple isn’t it?” — and he’ll scarcely notice. He’ll just go to his next shot, swing hard employing the unorthodox footwork of a man just realizing his shoes have caught fire, hit it close, no doubt, and seem totally unimpressed.

You can bask in the reflected glow of the world’s No. 1 player on an almost tyrannical hot streak right now, but don’t expect Scheffler to join in and work on tanning his ego. This is a guy who loved telling the story a month ago of a fan congratulating him on his stay atop the world rankings, then adding “Only 11 more years to go.” Thus putting his total time at No. 1 in modest perspective to that of Woods.

(Lest we ever forget how dominant Woods was, here are the scary numbers: Woods was at the top for a total of more than 13 years. Scheffler’s total stands at 82 weeks. Woods holds the record of 281 consecutive weeks at No. 1. Scheffler is currently at 47.)

 

As Scheffler keeps winning, though, people seem to want to rush him into Woods’ company. So much sounder and more consistent is Scheffler’s tee-to-green game compared to his peers that it’s hard not to get carried away. And as Woods has faded, the golf public badly wants to find someone else to carry it away.

Even those who have studiously watched others like Dustin Johnson and Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas be measured for Tiger-level domination — and inevitably come up just short — are not deterred.

“I think it’s very fair,” two-time U.S. Open champ and ESPN analyst Andy North said of the Scheffler-Woods comparison talk.

“If you get past his footwork and the things you see on TV, he’s able to put the club on the ball as well as anybody we’ve had in a while,” North said. “He’s got a beautiful combination of current generation skills and a lot of old school, grind-it-out, play-shots kind of guy. I think that’s a beautiful combination. I love what he’s doing on the golf course.”

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